journey of a trader

oilman5

Well-Known Member
thanks asish. , fact is i am poor as short term trader...

why?...may be long days fundamental faith...
but worst one . holding loser..[use of hope]...
entry is definitely my strength...
but exit is poor...judgemental error comes from other commitment....
and its law of TRADE....ONLY WITH 100% COMMITMENT U HAVE CHANCE

TO TRADE RIGHT..
..................................................................................................
SO AGAIN I COMMENT ON DAY TRADE....
why i guess successfully...natural flair of 30yr of chess play..alternate situation to act, use of survival instinct.....

but its stressful, i am older now,...may be new guys r faster,
good candidate for next day is my strength....
metastock explorer i use...
also omnitrader..which suggest some candidates....

so i use pib, ...entry technique .. x of buy at break out on particular pivot...
if volume..is good...so i commit bigger...

i dont mind to lose, as loss r less in number..so it has +expectancy..
if market condition unpredictive simply i dont trade...

it helps to me...as noise trading i understand...so break of pivot , moving
to higher zone ...easier and suit me in past...
as i believe daytrade is gambling,..so luck of right or wrong is always there
so i am ready for wrong, it prevents me let loss run...
as screening is done..i know what i am expected to do..
filter..+ bias of nifty...
any news publish creates criticality of trade...sudden surge of greedy fool
can send stock price any where..., last 6month behavior thats why i study on hourly chart..on particular surgeday..

its readyness to act..basically given me lots of right trade consistently
...............
i give more hints..x of 7 ema with closing price..
trigger... 8day ..william%r std signal
5day rsi strength increasing...

i assure u it gives money...those who doubt can back test it..
atleast condition fulfilled , given +move within next 2days

psychologically i find it very useful, as i am ready to lose ..i am nothing to loss..[hey i bet on bangladesh,against india..pun intended..]
i can avoid my weakzone..volatility

so those who have asked...ENJOY

oilman5
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
investment vs trading
...................................
this is a controversial topic...still i decide to touch..investing..is putting money
for long term..strategic thought process is imp...consider any md..plans for expansion of his company..money arrangement and plan to plough back
..implementation of dream into reality..
constant watch to maintain target as per plan...is key...

same thing , if u invest u have to check...

trading
.............
its a concept to buy low and sell high..
where the demand is EXPECTED TO build, buying candidate..
where further demand realisation is not possible ...SELL

SINCE expected materialisation is not possible[ on some cases]..
get out before other traders dump..

whichever path u look none is easy...
fortunately some torch bearer help in writing their journey in distinctive style

many a great name all of us can utter.., but its IMPOSSIBLE to follow them

why?..2 individual r not same...copying is not possible

can u be any of them?..no i assure u ..its an impossible event

CONDITION AND CONSTRAINT...CAN NOT BE REPEATED SAMEWAY..WITH
SIMILAR VIEW AND LOGIC...

so what is your path and alternate view?

amalgamate...

a basic std rate of return is possible...

money managers view is easy to implement...

investment view..PUT MONEY IN SUNRISE INDUSTRY. in india for indian company

trading view.....based on some value analysis buy at oversold zone..and hope mean reversion shall bring u quick profit[ holding period 3-6month]

many traders may disagree...i say to them ..;'u r right, u do the same thing
in smaller timeframe..based on your superiority..so is ur RETURN'

NOW LOOK AT ALL GREAT DAY TRADER...they r mostly engineer..strong math logic...understand linear relationship..
with own developed one/ intraday plan ..with good signal generated..cont..
they can make money...regular basis...discipline and strict stop loss is mantra
experienced one with fund available...can do PLAY LEVERAGE

next..i say those who work in this field...they simply copy cat a winner ,

depending upon experience ..do a little, lose a little'

now..COMES THE FOOL, DREAMER...THEY NEVER UNDERSTAND HOW TOUGH ITS REALLY..[van tharp never made money by trading..though he trains many
best of the best traders]
so first..check..do have the ELEMENT IN YOU..time to invest and learn
right attitude....TORTOISE WINS HERE..

oilman5..
[comments pl]
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
some of my friend telephone..what rubbish you write?..is trading that easy..
NO ..I SAY NO.....

TRADING ON PRICE HAS 3ELEMENT...NOISE...
TREND
SHOCK/EVENT
Noise..a price within +/- 3%[arbitary..as per my experience ]
its the time u should watch..
soon some big fund /syndicate starts buy or sell..with price change +/-change..defining an up or down trend accordingly...
its when more volume joins ..media writes..oppurtunity to make money for early entrants..when trend is no more moving up..[ put hope triangle pattern
shall show CONTINUATION]..ANOTHER RISKY ATTEMPT CAN BE MADE..
BUT WITH STRICT STOP...
hopelessly i dont know when profit book starts and price shall fall

many signal is used by many as per confidence level and experience..

but none can handle SHOCK/EVENT...
SINCE IT CHANGES INVESTORS SENTIMENT BY NEWCOMING OF BUY AND SELL ORDER...hence price study..aswell as order flow must be the tools in your trading arsenal

2nd aim is study what others trader shall do ..on an event...
CAN U CREATE MONEY MAKING OPPURTUNITY OUT OF IT?

3rd factor...global money flow to india...
if fii is selling, YOU HAVE TO..
nobody can withstand flood, ...sell and go to hill station...

oilman5
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
some book reference
trading psychology
........................
1. van tharp
2. dr elder
3. ari kiev
4. phantom of pit

trading phiosophy
they are works of trader
....................................
1. gann
2. linda
3. larry williams
4. bill williams
5. levermore
6. niederhoffer victor
7. soros
8. j ross

some technical related writing/context

1. candlestick
2. elliot wave
3. momentum theory
4. profit magic of stock transaction timing

system design
....................
1. way to trade
2. tusher chande
3. p. kaufman
4. j katz

applied theme
.......................
1. contrarian thinking
2. fibonacci
3. a-b-c pattern
4. stop loss
5. daytraders bible
6. trading on probability
7. portfolio management

subjective trading
.........................
swing trading ...landry
bary rudd
encyclopedia of chart pattern
tony crabel works
4 biggest mistake
trading in the zone
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
yes, i am in a mood to give
giving away approach to subjective trading
...........................................
topic.. INDIAN STOCK MARKET
.................................................
1. FUNDAMENTAL
..........................
GROUP A AND SOME B1 ONLY...
LITERATURE..INDIAN INDUSTRY GROWTH 2002..2012
COMPANY ANALYSIS .. TOP DOWN AND BOTTOM UP APPROACH
SECTOR ANALYSIS
CAPITAL MARKET 500 COMPODIUM
LATEST RESULT..COMPARE QUARTERLY GROWTH
COMPANY .GOOD MANAGEMENT..ORDER POSITION
..................SUNRISE INDUSTRY..
GOVT FAVORISM..STORY FOR LONG RUN
MONOPOLISTIC VIEW

TECHNICAL
................
METASTOCK STUDY
INDICATOR STUDY
RESISTANCE SUPPORT .. PATTERN STUDY
GAP AND VOLUME SPIKE
TRADING MARKETS ...TOOLS
WHEN REVERSAL IS IMMINENT.. SIT ON CASH
MOMENTUM PLAY
DELIVERY IDEA
.....................
3.PSYCHOLOGICAL APPROACH

SUBJECTIVE BIAS..WHY MARKET WILL GO UP? WHEN IT WILL FALL?
FII FACTOR..GLOBAL FACTOR..OTHER WORLD STOCK EXCHANGE FACTOR
RESULT FACTOR... FEEL GOOD AND MEDIA HYPE
WHAT IS ACTUALLY STATE OF MARKET..WHAT TO BE IN NEAR FUTURE
4. TRADING
......................
DAY TRADE STYLE...SWING STYLE.. INTERMEDIATE TRADE STYLE

TRADE RULE 1 2 3

WHAT NOT
TO DO 1 2 3
HOW TO
TAKE ENTRY 1 2 3

PROFIT BOOKING
& STOP LOSS GUIDANCE 1 2 3

HOW TO ADD POSITION 2 3
CHECKING
RISK/ REWARD 1 2 3

DIARY
............
1. WRITE ANALYSIS OF ALL PAST TRADE
2. WHY PLANNING TO ENTER 'NEW' STOCK ...WRITTEN RULE
3. BEFORE BUY X CHECK ...DONT ALLOW TO BIG LOSS
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
THROUGH MONEY CONTROL.COM U CAN GO TO RESEARCH .. TO CHECK QUATERLY RESULT COMPARATIVE...
SELL RULE IS IMP.
WHEN TO HOLD?
WHEN MARKET SHALL TOP OUT..ULTIMATE TEST OF A subjective trader
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
objective trading
..........................as i am novice in computer..
column name is given ..pl prepare suitable sheet..in excel ..attach
[ if possible or mail to me]

trade sheet
...................
column
no heading
1 dt
2 name of stock
3 type of trade..buy/sell
4. trade set up condition..gap/ volume spike/support pt
result out/ commodity price up
5. entry condition ..pull back/ break out/ continuation
6. money alloted ..no of stock x price
7. style of trade ..day/ short term / inter mediate
8. present value of nifty
9. any hype at present...
10. stop loss
11. profit booking strategy ....1.................2
12. profit target.. p1............p2

13. additional buy strategy/ with reason
14. sell dt and NIFTY VALUE

15. sell quantity x sell price..
16. whether trade is profit...howmuch
17. whether trade is loss.. howmuch
18. have u followed stop and SAR. IF NOT WHY
19. reason of sell
20. cost of trade[ comission+ tax]
21. your net profit
22. your monthly rate of return..

2nd sheet ..monthly performance sheet
.....................................................

column description

1 month
2 total no of trade in month
3. no of winning trade
4. total amount of winning
5. no of lossing trade
6. total amount of losing
7. net profit/ loss in a month
8. is losing trade shown some pattern failure/
wrong assumption
9. av. win amount per trade per lakh
10. increase of your equity value..
11. percentage of wrong trade
12. risk amount in each trade. value ..in %
13. drawdown condition to quit
14. monthly yield compare to nifty yield in month

note.. its best if u plot this equity curve
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
hi, can anybody prepare excel sheet..and copy paste link..
................................................................................

to become a trader
following register/file u should open and write....this will definitely make u a trader.. sufficiently real earning potential..only patience reqd..
1.trading as a business
2.trading psychology
3.your psychology and you[real one]
4.your trading rule
5.different type of trade..swing..intermediate term ..day trade
[its not u have todo, but must know on what conditional fulfillment others trade..enter and exit]
6.longterm trade or investment
7.indian stock
8. factors which move price
9.fundamental analysis
10.market study
11.ta..indicator analysis..
12.chart pattern
13.money management/risk analysis
14.trade preparation..volume study..trade management..
15. software..metastock[u may prefer other]
16.short sell
17.diary ..trade analysis..

take print/ write on them..check ..then only apply in real market
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
Quote:
Whenever anyone comes to me for help in starting a trading career, one of the first things I recommend is organizing a business plan. It provides direction and helps novice traders start off with a systematic approach.

I suggest that new traders put their costs, their goals, and how they intend to achieve those goals, in writing. It's the same approach you'd follow for any other business. They usually come back with a reasonable plan.

Say, for instance, you have $10,000 a month in expenses. To earn that amount you would need to net around 50 cents a day, trading 1,000 shares. So you would start off learning an appropriate trading strategy and build up to that goal. It sounds simple enough, but the problem people quickly run into is that this isn't exactly like any other business, is it?

Trading Without Goals

We live in a very goal-oriented society. Aristotle once said, "Man is a goal-seeking animal. His life only has meaning if he is reaching out and striving for his goals." And I believe it's very important to have goals. They help keep us focused and motivated, giving us a sense of purpose and direction.

But trading is a funny occupation. Many of the same things that create success in other endeavors will cause problems in your trading. And so it is with goals. Trading goals can put you in a mindset that may very well act as a negative force on your trading.

.

One of the problems with setting trading goals is that too often, the goal is all we can think of. Albert Einstein once said, "The American lives even more for his goals, for the future, than the European. Life for him is always becoming, never being." A lot of people look at this occupation in terms of making money and enjoying the freedom that trading affords, and they don't really have a love of trading for trading's sake. If you fail to enjoy the process of striving toward the goal, it will be difficult to reach that goal.

Another problem is that people always seem to set their trading goals too high. Your goal has to be reasonable for your skill level. Otherwise, you are setting yourself up for a lot of frustration. Trading goals automatically add pressure -- and the higher the goal, the more pressure there is. The more pressure there is, the more emotion you add to your trading. The more emotion you have, the more mistakes you will make.

There is an innate problem with setting up daily trading quotas as a goal. You can't force good trading setups. They either come to you or they don't. We are entirely dependent on what the market offers us. That means some days you will meet your goal, and some days you will not. It is hoped that the good days make up for the bad ones, but you have to come to terms with the inconsistency. If you try to force trades, you will invariably suffer an increase in stops
Slow and Steady

One thing that helps is making your hero the turtle instead of the hare. I see this time and time again in my trading room. Whenever anyone makes a big, impressive gain, that trader becomes the hero. Everyone tries to then emulate that trader's moves. Meanwhile, someone else who has been steadily racking up one small gain after another goes almost unnoticed, when in reality, the steady, small, consistent trades are adding up to a lot more than the occasional whopper.

Another thing that helps is breaking your goal up into steps. Rather than focusing on achieving that goal of 50 cents a day with 1,000 shares, start with 10 cents, then 20 cents, and build up gradually. Trade small shares to control your risk. Start with 100 shares, build up to 200, then 500, increasing shares only after you have achieved consistent profits. Take it one step at a time, and it might surprise you what you can achieve.

Last year, I took a backpacking trip into a wilderness area in Northern California. I am used to horse-packing, but I had offered to take my contractor on a nice bow-hunting excursion for record class mule deer, so I decided to act as guide and backpack in. I tried my best to keep my pack light, but the gear we needed that time of year during colder weather meant I had to haul 40 pounds.

Now I hadn't been backpacking in almost 40 years. So when I got out of the truck and looked up at the 3,000-foot peak we intended to climb, all I could say was, wow. Looking at our goal up there really put me in a state of despair. I kept looking up at the peak, then at my 40-pound pack, then over at the happy 45-year-old "kid" next to me.
put the pack on and started off. About 50 feet down the trail, my legs and back started hurting. I must have grunted or something because my friend asked, "Ken, you OK?"

I said, "Sure. I am fine." But what I was really thinking was, "What have I done? I am not going to make this!" It reminded me of what many new traders say to me after two weeks of trying to learn.

So I decided I wasn't going to look at the peak. I resolved to simply look at the trail and take one step at a time. The trip wound up being a "one step at a time" proposition. I was convinced I couldn't climb to the peak, but I could take one more step. And the funny thing is, I made it 12 miles! In fact, I could have kept going, but my friend was pooped out.

So take your eyes off the peak. If you want to reach your trading goals, learn to enjoy the process and simply take your trading one step at a time.


cheers,
coursey nkp
Only thing is as regards to implementation, proper education is also required as it is in the US. You can't go on learning by trial and error in a field that has a more than 90% failure rate. If there can be hotel management and textile designing courses, there should be proper trading courses.

Trading for the love of trading- everyone is not so lucky. Many ppl have to force themselves to do things they don't like to support thier families.

No matter how excellent the analysis, it only reflects the current situation.It cannot guarantee what happens in the future-"The future is not always an extention of the present"-That is wht TA reflects and that is why trading is a journey not a destination. You have to go where the mkt takes you and make continous adjustments
sh 50
 

oilman5

Well-Known Member
We have outlined four major hurdles when it comes to learning from our own mistakes. FIrstly, we often fail to recognize our mistakes because we attribute them to bad luck rather than poor decision making. Secondly, when we are looking back, we often can't separate what we believed beforehand from what we now know. Thirdly, thanks to the illusion of control, we often end up assuming outcomes are the result of our actions. Finally, we are adept at distorting the feedback we do receive, so that it fits into our own view of our abilities.

Some of these behavioural problems can be countered by keeping written records of decisions and the 'logic' behind those decisions. But this requires discipline and a willingness to re-examine our past decisions. Psychologists have found that it takes far more information about mistakes than it should do, to get us to change our minds."
bharatk8
Just about everyone knows the grisly statistics about options trading: 90% of all naked option players (no, that doesn't mean they trade in the buff, only that they buy uncovered puts or calls) end up losing money. But hardly anyone knows the equally grisly statistics about equity trading: 80% of all stock investors end up losing money.
But how can that be, you ask? Over time, the stock market is a sure thing, a guaranteed way to make money. It's so easy. All you have to do is buy good stocks and hold them. Everybody says this, pundits, brokers, financial advisors, the media, the historical record itself. No one who simply bought and held the Dow Jones Industrial Average or the S&P 500 has ever lost money over a 20-year time span. Right? Yes, right. Now go find me someone who bought and held for 20-years. You should be able to find a few, about 20% to be precise. The other 80% lose money.

How does this happen? A couple of ways. Primarily, it happens because no matter how resolute people think they are about buying and holding, they usually fall into the same old emotional pattern of buying high and selling low. Investors are human beings. Human beings naturally want to be in the winning camp, and human beings naturally seek to avoid pain. When things are most euphoric in the investment world, at the top of a long bull market, these human beings are in there buying. And when things are most painful, at the end of bear market, these human beings are in there selling. In fact, it's usually the final capitulation of the last remaining "holders" that sets up the end of the bear market and the start of a new bull market. As Sy Harding says in his excellent book "Riding The Bear," while people may promise themselves at the top of bull markets that this time they'll behave differently, "no such creature as a buy and hold investor ever emerged from the other side of the subsequent bear market." Statistics compiled by Ned Davis Research back up Harding's assertion. Every time the market declines more than 10% (and "real" bear markets don't even officially begin until the decline is 20%), mutual funds experience net outflows of investor money. Fear is a stronger emotion than greed. Most bear markets last for months (the norm), or even years (both the 1929 and 1966 bear markets), and one can see how the torture of losing money week after week, month after month, would wear down even the most determined buy and holder. But the average investor's pain threshold is a lot lower than that. The research shows that It doesn't matter if the bear market lasts less than 3 months (like the 1990 bear) or less than 3 days (like the 1987 bear). People will still sell out, usually at the very bottom, and almost always at a loss.

So THAT is how it happens. And the only way to avoid it is to avoid owning stocks during bear markets. If you try to ride them out, odds are you'll fail. And if you believe that we are in a New Era, and that bear markets are a thing of the past, your next of kin will have my sympathies.

But people lose money in other ways, too, even during the strongest of bull markets. Let's look at some of the more common trading mistakes to which people are prone. Many of them are related, part and parcel of the same refusal to pay proper attention to risk management. If you recognize your own actions in some of these, join the club. Over the years, I've committed every sin on the list at least once. Still do on occasion.

-- Letting small losses turn into large losses.

A whole myriad of mistakes accompany this one. Refusing to take a loss at all. Overbetting. Catching falling knives. Averaging down. Etc., etc.. At root, it's probably because the average investor pays little mind to risk management. In a way, it's understandable. The majority of those in the market today have only come into the market during the last 5 to 7 years. They have never really experienced a serious bear market. The only investing world they know is that of an ongoing bull market, where it's ALWAYS okay to buy the dips, where a stock that craters ALWAYS comes back. But SOMEBODY bought UBid at 121. And SOMEBODY bought eBay at 234. I hope it wasn't you. You should only be buying stocks that are in an ongoing uptrend (hopefully not TOO far along however), or those that are bottoming out following a stiff correction. In other words, when you buy a stock it should be with the expectation that it will go up (otherwise, why buy it?). If it goes down instead, you've made a mistake in your analysis. Either you're early, or just plain wrong. It amounts to the same thing. There is no shame in being wrong, only in STAYING wrong. If a stock does not quickly begin to move in the direction you envisioned when you purchased it, you should begin to question your reasons for owning it and you should immediately put it on a short leash. If it doesn't turn in relatively quick fashion, get rid of it. You can always go back in later, when it really turns. This goes to the heart of the familiar adage: let winners run, cut losers short. Nothing will eat into your performance more than carrying a bunch of dogs and their attendant fleas, both in terms of actual losses and in terms of dead, or underperforming, money.

-- Refusing to take a loss at all.

I simply don't understand the way some people think. From whence came the idiotic notion that a loss "on paper" isn't a "real" loss until you actually sell the stock? Or that a profit isn't a profit until the stock is sold and the money is in the bank? Nonsense. Your stock and your portfolio is worth whatever you can sell it for, at the market, right at this moment. No more. No less. People are reluctant to sell a loser for a variety of reasons. For some it's an ego/pride thing, an inability to admit they've made a mistake. That is false pride, and it's faulty thinking. Your refusal to acknowledge a loss doesn't make it any less real. Hoping and waiting for a loser to come back and save your fragile pride is dumb. Your loser may NOT come back. And even if it does, a stock that is down 50% has to put up a 100% gain just to get back to breakeven. Losses are a cost of doing business, a part of the game. If you never have losses, then you are not trading properly. Most pros have three losers for every winner. They make money by keeping the losses small and letting the profits build. You should be almost happy to take a loss. It means that you have jettisoned an underachiever stock and have freed up that dead money to put to better use elsewhere. Take your losses ruthlessly, put them out of mind and don't look back, and turn your attention to your next trade.
Overbetting.

This gets into the realm of money management. Diversification, the process of spreading your investment capital around in different assets and sectors to feather the vagaries of the market, has gotten a bit of a bum rap lately. Some of the New Paradigm folks think the concept is "old fashioned." These tend to be the same people who have every last dime in a handful of internet stocks. That's not investing, or even trading. It's gambling. Preservation of capital is paramount. If you run out of chips, game over man. You may feel a bit envious the day your neighbor, who has put everything he owns into Zowie.com parks his new Mercedes in the driveway next door, but you'll feel a lot better the day the repo man comes with the tow truck to take it back. Most professionals will allocate no more than 2-5% of their total investment capital to any one position. Ten percent should be your absolute max. One more thing. I've checked the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights, and nowhere in either of them does it say that you have to have ALL of your money in the stock market ALL of the time. Money management also pertains to your total investment posture. Even when your analysis is overwhelmingly bullish, it never hurts to have at least some cash on hand, earning its 5% in the money market. You'll need it when you see that next "can't miss" stock but don't want to sell any of your other "can't miss" stocks to raise the money to buy it. Your exposure should be consistent with your overall market analysis. As the market becomes more overbought, overextended, and overvalued, your cash level should rise accordingly. Then as the market gets more oversold and undervalued, you can raise your market exposure accordingly. Being ALL in the market or ALL out of the market sounds like a good idea, and it may work out wonderfully on paper, but it rarely plays out so smoothly in real life and real investing. But you should still employ a sliding scale of exposure, based on your market analysis.
Bottom fishing/Catching falling knives.

Many of the daily e-mails I get are of the following type: "Nick, Zowie.com is down 23 points today. Time to buy?!!!" My answer is almost always the same. "Put your pants on, Spartacus. No!" Don't ANTICIPATE bottoms. It's tempting to try to pinpoint an exact low, especially if you're working with indictors like Fibonacci fan and time lines, cycle studies, regression channels, even plain old lateral support points. But it's almost always better to let the stock find its bottom on it's own, and then start to nibble. Just because a stock is down big doesn't mean it can't go down even bigger. In fact, a major multipoint drop is often just the beginning of a larger decline. It's always satisfying to catch an exact low tick, but when it happens it's usually by accident. Let stocks and markets bottom and top on their own and limit your efforts to recognizing the fact "soon enough." Nobody, and I mean nobody, can consistently nail the bottom tick or top tick. Those who try usually get burned.

-- Averaging down.

Don't do it. For one thing, you shouldn't even have the opportunity, because you should have sold that dog before it got to the level where averaging down is tempting. The pros average UP, not down; they got to be pros because they added to winners, not losers. And speaking of averaging UP, there's a right way to do it. And doubling your position is not it. Rather, you should add 1/2 your original stake. If other words, if you already own 100 shares and want to bolster your position, you buy 50 shares. If you later decide to add more, you add 25 shares, etc. Why you should do it this way is too long to go into here, but that's the way the math works out best for you.
Shorting bulls and buying bears.

Yes, there are stocks that will go up in bear markets and stocks that will go down in bull markets, but it's usually not worth the effort to hunt for them. The vast majority of stocks, some 80+%, will go with the market flow. And so should you. It doesn't make sense to counter trade the prevailing market trend. If you're worried about a short term pullback, simply cut back on your trading, take a few profits, and build up your stash of cash. Let that money earn its 5% in the money market until the squall has passed.

-- Confusing the company with its stock.

There are some fine companies with mediocre stocks, and some mediocre companies with fine stocks. Try not to confuse the two. This is, at heart, a fundamental analysis versus technical analysis issue. Some stocks simply have excellent trading characteristics while others don't. Maybe it's a matter of liquidity, or a fanatical message board following, or a daytrading clientele, or whatever. Take Amazon.com for example. Is the company a good one? Who knows? Not me. But the stock is. I wouldn't want to have to hold it for 20 years, but I sure don't mind trading it a few days at a time, the "right" days. That sucker moves. Baby Bells are at the other end of the spectrum. Fine companies for the most part. Wouldn't mind owning one for 20 years. But you have to pick your spots when you go to trade them, because a measly 3 point move in a single session is huge for a Baby Bell. Also remember this: even the stock of a great company can go through a bad patch. IBM is a great company today, with its stock selling at 124, and it was a great company five years ago, when its stock was selling at 13.

Falling in love with a "story."

This is related to confusing the company with its stock. There are a lot of intriguing "stories" out there, but they don't always translate into instant riches. Iomega was such a "story" stock. The story was that the company's Zip drive was going to replace the floppy in the world's computers. The stock ran straight up to the sky to wait for the story to come true. And for the most part, IOM's story DID come true (many stories don't, witness the Y2K stocks), but the stock gave back most of its gains anyway. Turns out it wasn't that much of a story after all. In other cases, the story comes true but the stock you've bet on isn't the story teller. Witness the laser vision "story." A number of companies were hyped as the category killer, but only one, VISX, made its stockholders real money. And how about satellite communications? Great story, eh? Tell it to those who loaded up on Iridium's stock.

-- Following the leader.

Just as money tends to flow into last year's top mutual fund (sure to be next year's underachiever), people tend to chase the high flying momentum MO-MO stocks, succumbing to the buzz and getting in AFTER the stock has already jumped 80% and inevitably just before it drops 60% as the early buyers take their profits by selling their shares to the "greater fool," you. Yes, you can make a quick buck chasing momentum, but you can lose it even quicker. You can never be sure there's a greater fool coming in after you, and that could make you the "greatest fool."
Finding the Holy Grail.

Technicians regularly fall into periods where they tend to favor one or two indicators over all others. No harm in that, so long as the favored indicators are working, and keep on working. But the analyst should always be aware of the fact that as market conditions change, so will the efficacy of their indicators. Indicators that work in one type of market may lead you badly astray in another. You have to be aware of what's working now and what's not, and be ready to shift when conditions shift. There is no Holy Grail indicator that works all the time and in all markets. If you think you've found it, get ready to lose money. Instead, take your trading signals from the "accumulation of evidence" among ALL of your indicators, not just one.

-- Overtrading.

The Picks Port commits this sin on a regular basis, but that's mostly because of the nature of the beast. I have to be more short term oriented than I'd prefer to be because you, my subscribers, tend to be more short term oriented than you probably should be. Daytrading, of course, is the epitome of overtrading. Most people just are not equipped, emotionally, intellectually, or mechanically, to day trade and statistics tell us that most are not successful at it. If you are not making money at daytrading but keep on doing it anyway, you should examine your motives. If it's the action you crave, take up skydiving. It's safer and cheaper.

Excessive tape watching.

I get a kick out of people who insist that they're intermediate or long term investors, buy a stock, then anxiously ask whether they should bail the first time the stocks drops a point or two. Likely as not, the panic was induced by watching the tape, or hearing some talking head on CNBC. Watching the ticker can be fun. It can be mesmerizing. But it can also be dangerous. It leads to emotionalism and to hasty decisions. Try not to make trading decisions when the market is in session. Do your analysis and make your plan when the market is closed and the White Noise of the television and the ticker is absent, then calmly execute your plan the following day. You have your stop and your target. So go take a nap, or go to the movies, or mow the lawn. The only time you should be scrutinizing the tape is when you're looking for an immediate entry or exit point for a trade. Otherwise, do your blood pressure a favor and tune out.

-- Being undercapitalized.

If you have less than $50,000 to invest, you'd probably be better off in a mutual fund rather than trading individual stocks. To get proper diversification with a fully invested exposure you need at least 10 stocks. You do the math.

-- Letting the tax tail wag the stock dog.

Don't let tax considerations dictate your decision on whether to sell a stock. Pay capital gains tax willingly, even joyfully. The only way to avoid paying taxes on a stock trade is to not make any money on the trade
Relying on gurus.

I'm spitting in my own rice bowl here, but you should not be letting some self-appointed market "gooroo" dictate or dominate your trading decisions. The most you should expect, or accept, from folks like me are a few trading ideas, a little technical analysis tutoring, and a bit of guidance in maintaining a solid trading discipline. You should not think of a market letter (ANY market letter) as a substitute for a personally managed portfolio. No one knows or cares about your personal circumstances like you do; how much money you have to invest, your tolerance for pain, your goals, your most suitable and comfortable time frame, etc. And you should be doing everything in your power to make Nick's Picks unnecessary and irrelevant to your trading, to learn enough not to need the likes of me anymore. Read some books. Take some courses. Buy some decent charting software and arrange for a data feed.

-- Thinking this market stuff is easy.

Don't confuse genius with a bull market. It's not that hard make money in a roaring bull market. Keeping your gains when the bear comes prowling is the hard part. Don't get cocky, but don't grovel either. You're not as smart as you think you are when everything is going great. But you're not as dumb as you think you are when everything is going to hell either. The market whips all our butts now and then. The whipping usually comes just when we think we've got it all figured out.

-- Thinking rather than looking.

One thing you should be thankful for is that you don't HAVE to come up with a reason for WHY the market is doing what it's doing. The talking heads on CNBC do because that's their job. I do too, because I know you expect it of me. But you don't. Just follow your chart work and let someone else do the pontificating. After all, who REALLY knows why stock ABC goes up 5 points on Monday while stock XYZ, in the same business, goes down 5 points? That's the great thing about technical analysis. You don't have to know. The price action is THE TRUTH. It's all you really need to know. Price doesn't lie. Price doesn't alibi. Price never complains and never explains. It is what it is. When XYZ goes up $5 on heavy volume, let Joe Hairdo on CNBC jabber on about what it all means. We KNOW what it means. It means XYZ went up $5 on heavy volume.
saint